The Ministry of Finance has launched the Tax Revenue for Economic Enhancement (TREE) project in Cape Coast.

The revenue collection-led strategy which places priority on improving the revenue collection and enforcement processes are expected to improve the revenue of the various District, Municipal and Metropolitan Assemblies in the country.

Speaking at the launch, the Minister of Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, charged the District Assemblies to toughen their revenue collection base to feed into government’s 'Ghana Beyond Aid’ pursuit.

“The Tax Revenue for Economic Enhancement (TREE) project has therefore come at the opportune time to help increase revenue generation at MMDA level and reduce the pressures on the consolidated fund.”

“New technologies like the Taxman software being deployed by the project will help overcome common revenue administration challenges in Ghana,” he explained.

According to the Finance Minister, Ghana as a lower middle-income country is transitioning away from dependency on development assistance and the government of Ghana will increasingly rely primarily on domestic resources to finance its development agenda.

Ken Ofori-Atta explains the government is rather leveraging development assistance to build the internal revenue generation capacities of selected MMDAs to serve as a catalytic use of resources to ensure that economic development is sustainable and irreversible.

Program director, VNG International and the International Cooperation Agency of the Association of Netherlands, Peter Jongkind, urged the District assemblies to organize sustainable funding cycle in which they determine how these new revenues would be spent.

This, according to him will put them in the driving seat of their own future; will promote a sustainable increase in IGF, and enable them to improve basic services to their citizens.

“It will be remarkable, exciting, but also a difficult and challenging journey for all of us, with only one focus: a better future for all Ghanaians and realization of Ghana beyond aid,” he assured.

Peter Jongkind explained why some Assemblies fail to improve in their revenue collection. To him, many of the Assemblies are not creative enough to withstand the shocks associated with the generation of funds.

“Some of the challenges in which MMDAs face in nurturing this young tree include a lack of knowledge on how to grow the tree; inadequate communication with citizens about the payment of taxes and what the services the citizens will receive in return and the lacuna in the many financial leakages, tax gaps”, he added.

Central Regional Minister, Kwamina Duncan, says Ghana must take a critical look at the fiscal decentralization policy which invariably involves the effective mobilization and judicious use of funds.

He is confident Ghana cannot develop as expected if it continues to rely heavily on external fiscal inflows from Central government and development partners.

“This TREE project resonates with the president’s call to help build a Ghana beyond aid,” he argued.

Head of the Office of Local Government service, Dr. Nana Ato Arthur, expressed his excitement that the TREE project has its focus on the property rate, the business operating permit and the building permit. To him, these areas are very important source of revenue for local administrations all over the world.

“From an inter-governmental and fiscal decentralization perspective, the more revenue MMDAs can generate, the more autonomy they will have.”

Currently, the internally generated funds are the only funds that MMDAs have total control over because the common fund and most development partner funds are targeted toward development project, and therefore cannot be used for recurrent expenditures,” he added.

The official launch of the 4-year program being funded by the Royal Netherlands government with the overall objective of eliminating the inefficiencies that impedeMMDAs’ optimal local revenue mobilization, improve the involvement of citizens in local decision making and ultimately to enhance service delivery to the general public.

Participants of the workshop include the Dutch Ambassador to Ghana, His Excellency Ron Strikker. Chief Executives, Coordinating directors, budget and finance officers drawn from across 32 MMDAs in the Central, Western and Ashanti regions.

The program is supported by the Royal Kingdom of the Netherlands to Ghana’s development agenda, particularly in the areas of Good Governance and Domestic Resource Mobilization.